She tells the children the work she’s doing is important to the war effort, and instead offers them a bedknob enchanted with a traveling spell which only Paul can use in exchange for keeping her secret. Miss Price instead turns Charles into a rabbit, but her spell quickly wears off. The children decide not to run away, and the next morning Charles attempts to blackmail Miss Price, using the knowledge that she’s an apprentice witch to get her to do what the children want. The oldest, Charles, sees this as an opportunity. However, the children, intent on a midnight escape back home to London, spot Miss Price riding her broom and witness her crash landing. That first night, once the children are asleep, Miss Price excitedly unwraps her package from Professor Emelius Browne’s College of Witchcraft-her first witch’s broom. The children are placed with Miss Price, who reluctantly takes them in. In the August of 1940 in England, children like Carrie, Charles, and Paul Rawlins are evacuated from London to the countryside of Pepperinge Eye to be safe from the Nazi air raids of World War II. If it’s been a while, you can read our synopsis below, otherwise skip right ahead to our review. Grab hold of your bedposts! We’re about to dive into our review of Disney’s Bedknobs and Broomsticks, the 49th film in the Disnerd Movie Challenge.
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